A modern, feature-rich, cross-platform firmware development environment for the UEFI and PI specifications from www.uefi.org.
It is recommended to install this Python version to run the full set of scripts that enable CI in the project.
Other Python requirements for build can be found in the EDK II Build Instructions.
Host Type & Toolchain | Build Status | Test Status | Code Coverage |
---|---|---|---|
Windows_VS2022 | |||
Ubuntu_GCC5 |
Toolchain | CONFIG | DEBUG | RELEASE | NOOPT |
---|---|---|---|---|
EmulatorPkg_Win_VS2022 | IA32
|
|||
X64
|
||||
IA32 FULL
|
||||
X64 FULL
|
||||
OvmfPkg_Win_VS2022 | IA32
|
|||
X64
|
||||
IA32 X64
|
||||
IA32 X64 FULL
|
Toolchain | CONFIG | DEBUG | RELEASE | NOOPT |
---|---|---|---|---|
ArmVirtPkg_Ubuntu_GCC5 | AARCH64
|
|||
ARM
|
||||
EmulatorPkg_Ubuntu_GCC5 | IA32
|
|||
X64
|
||||
IA32 FULL
|
||||
X64 FULL
|
||||
OvmfPkg_Ubuntu_GCC5 | IA32
|
|||
X64
|
||||
IA32 X64
|
||||
IA32 X64 FULL
|
- EmulatorPkg Ubuntu GCC5 Segfaults during execution.
- EmulatorPkg Ubuntu GCC5 Segfaults during execution.
More ArmVirtPkg CI Build Information
More EmulatorPkg CI Build Information
More OvmfPkg CI Build Information
The majority of the content in the EDK II open source project uses a BSD-2-Clause Plus Patent License. The EDK II open source project contains the following components that are covered by additional licenses:
- BaseTools/Plugin/CodeQL/analyze
- BaseTools/Source/C/LzmaCompress
- BaseTools/Source/C/VfrCompile/Pccts
- CryptoPkgLibraryBaseCryptLibSysCallinet_pton.c
- CryptoPkgLibraryIncludecryptodso_conf.h
- CryptoPkgLibraryIncludeopensslopensslconf.h
- EmbeddedPkg/Library/FdtLib. (EDK II uses BSD License)
- EmbeddedPkg/Include/fdt.h. (EDK II uses BSD Licence)
- EmbeddedPkg/Include/libfdt.h. (EDK II uses BSD License)
- MdeModulePkg/Library/LzmaCustomDecompressLib
- OvmfPkg
The EDK II open source project uses content from upstream projects as git submodules that are covered by additional licenses.
- BaseTools/Source/C/BrotliCompress/brotli
- CryptoPkg/Library/OpensslLib/openssl
- CryptoPkg/Library/MbedTlsLib/mbedtls
- MdeModulePkg/Library/BrotliCustomDecompressLib/brotli
- MdeModulePkg/Universal/RegularExpressionDxe/oniguruma
- UnitTestFrameworkPkg/Library/CmockaLib/cmocka
- UnitTestFrameworkPkg/Library/GoogleTestLib/googletest
- UnitTestFrameworkPkg/Library/SubhookLib/subhook
- RedfishPkg/Library/JsonLib/jansson
- MdePkg/Library/BaseFdtLib/libfdt
- MdePkg/Library/MipiSysTLib/mipisyst
- SecurityPkg/DeviceSecurity/SpdmLib/libspdm
The EDK II Project is composed of packages. The maintainers for each package are listed in Maintainers.txt.
- TianoCore
- EDK II
- Getting Started with EDK II
- Mailing Lists
- TianoCore Bugzilla
- How To Contribute
- Release Planning
To make a contribution to a TianoCore project, follow these steps.
- Create a change description in the format specified below to
- use in the source control commit log.
- Your commit message must include your
Signed-off-by
signature - Submit your code to the TianoCore project using the process
- that the project documents on its web page. If the process is not documented, then submit the code on development email list for the project.
- It is preferred that contributions are submitted using the same
- copyright license as the base project. When that is not possible, then contributions using the following licenses can be accepted:
- Apache License, Version 2.0: https://opensource.org/license/apache-2-0/
- BSD (2-clause): https://opensource.org/license/BSD-2-Clause
- BSD (3-clause): https://opensource.org/license/BSD-3-Clause
- MIT: https://opensource.org/license/MIT
- Python-2.0: https://opensource.org/license/Python-2.0
- Zlib: https://opensource.org/license/Zlib
For documentation:
- FreeBSD Documentation License
- https://www.freebsd.org/copyright/freebsd-doc-license.html
Contributions of code put into the public domain can also be accepted.
Contributions using other licenses might be accepted, but further review will be required.
Your change description should use the standard format for a
commit message, and must include your Signed-off-by
signature.
In order to keep track of who did what, all patches contributed must include a statement that to the best of the contributor's knowledge they have the right to contribute it under the specified license.
The test for this is as specified in the Developer's Certificate of Origin (DCO) 1.1. The contributor certifies compliance by adding a line saying
Signed-off-by: Developer Name [email protected]
where Developer Name
is the contributor's real name, and the email
address is one the developer is reachable through at the time of
contributing.
Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 By making a contribution to this project, I certify that: (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I have the right to submit it under the open source license indicated in the file; or (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source license and I have the right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless I am permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated in the file; or (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified it. (d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution are public and that a record of the contribution (including all personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with this project or the open source license(s) involved.
From: Contributor Name <[email protected]> Subject: [Repository/Branch PATCH] Pkg-Module: Brief-single-line-summary Full-commit-message Signed-off-by: Contributor Name <[email protected]>
- The first line of commit message is taken from the email's subject
line following
[Repository/Branch PATCH]
. The remaining portion of the commit message is the email's content. git format-patch
is one way to create this format
Repository
is the identifier of the repository the patch applies.This identifier should only be provided for repositories other than
edk2
. For exampleedk2-BuildSpecification
orstaging
.
Branch
is the identifier of the branch the patch applies. Thisidentifier should only be provided for branches other than
edk2/master
.For example
edk2/UDK2015
,edk2-BuildSpecification/release/1.27
, orstaging/edk2-test
.
Module
is a short identifier for the affected code or documentation. For exampleMdePkg
,MdeModulePkg/UsbBusDxe
,Introduction
, orEDK II INF File Format
.Brief-single-line-summary
is a short summary of the change.The entire first line should be less than ~70 characters.
Full-commit-message
a verbose multiple line comment describingthe change. Each line should be less than ~70 characters.
Signed-off-by
is the contributor's signature identifying themby their real/legal name and their email address.
The current submodules used in EDK II are in .gitmodules.
To get a full, buildable EDK II repository, use following steps of git command
git clone https://github.com/tianocore/edk2.git
cd edk2
git submodule update --init
cd ..
If there's update for submodules, use following git commands to get the latest submodules code.
cd edk2
git pull
git submodule update
Note: When cloning submodule repos, '--recursive' option is not recommended. EDK II itself will not use any code/feature from submodules in above submodules. So using '--recursive' adds a dependency on being able to reach servers we do not actually want any code from, as well as needlessly downloading code we will not use.